SKILL·A2C832

aikido

pjt222
更新于 1 month ago
8 次查看
26
3
26
在 GitHub 上查看
aidesign

关于

This Claude Skill enables developers to practice aikido, a defensive martial art focused on redirecting aggression and de-escalation. It teaches core techniques like throws and joint locks, safe falling (ukemi), and maintaining calm under pressure. Use it to learn controlled, non-harmful resolution of conflict and to cultivate centeredness.

快速安装

Claude Code

推荐
主要方式
npx skills add pjt222/agent-almanac -a claude-code
插件命令备选方式
/plugin add https://github.com/pjt222/agent-almanac
Git 克隆备选方式
git clone https://github.com/pjt222/agent-almanac.git ~/.claude/skills/aikido

在 Claude Code 中复制并粘贴此命令以安装该技能

技能文档

Practice Aikido

Aikido practice → centering, blending incoming force, resolve conflict via controlled technique not strength vs strength.

Use When

  • Learn defensive martial art → de-escalation + controlled resolution
  • Redirect aggression → no unnecessary harm
  • Build safe falling (ukemi) → any physical activity/emergency
  • Cultivate calm centeredness under pressure
  • Complement tai chi/meditation w/ partner practice (see tai-chi, meditate)
  • Train awareness + response → multiple simultaneous threats

In

  • Required: Practice space, padded/yielding (tatami, judo mats, grass; no concrete)
  • Required: Comfortable clothing, full range (gi preferred; loose exercise OK)
  • Optional: Training partner (essential for techniques; solo covers centering, ukemi, movement)
  • Optional: Practice weapons (wooden: jo ~128cm, bokken ~102cm, tanto ~30cm)
  • Optional: Exp level (beginner, intermediate, advanced; default: beginner)
  • Optional: Time (min 20 min; rec 60-90 min)

Do

Step 1: Ground + Center

Every technique begins centered. No center → muscular struggle.

  1. Hanmi (half-facing stance): one foot forward, shoulder-width, 60°
  2. Knees bent slight → weight sinks → one-point (seika tanden), 5cm below navel
  3. Shoulders relax fully → drop from ears
  4. Extend awareness outward, anchor at one-point
  5. Test: partner pushes chest gently
    • Resist upper body → not centered → relax, sink
    • Stable no effort → centered
  6. Weight underside: heavy part of arm = underside; upper surface light, buoyant
  7. Extend ki: project calm forward thru fingertips — intention, not tension

Stable, relaxed stance. Pushes absorb thru structure → ground, not muscles. Quiet mind, broad awareness.

If err: Rigid → holding tension. Shake arms/legs, 5 breaths, restart. Pushes displace → lower center (bend more), focus one-point. Centering deepens months — initial wobbliness normal.

Step 2: Ukemi (Falling + Rolling)

Receive technique safely. Most important skill — thousands of falls.

Ukemi Progression:
┌────────────────────┬──────────────────────────┬───────────────────────────┐
│ Level              │ Technique                │ Practice Method            │
├────────────────────┼──────────────────────────┼───────────────────────────┤
│ 1. Backward fall   │ Sit down, roll back,     │ From seated, then squat,  │
│ (ushiro ukemi)     │ slap mat with both arms  │ then standing. Chin to    │
│                    │ at 45 degrees            │ chest — never hit head    │
├────────────────────┼──────────────────────────┼───────────────────────────┤
│ 2. Side fall       │ Fall to the side, arm    │ From kneeling, then       │
│ (yoko ukemi)       │ slaps mat, body in arc   │ standing. Land on the     │
│                    │ — not flat on the back   │ fleshy side, not hip bone │
├────────────────────┼──────────────────────────┼───────────────────────────┤
│ 3. Forward roll    │ Roll diagonally over     │ From kneeling, then       │
│ (mae ukemi)        │ shoulder: hand-forearm-  │ standing, then moving.    │
│                    │ shoulder-opposite hip    │ The line is diagonal,     │
│                    │                          │ never straight over spine │
├────────────────────┼──────────────────────────┼───────────────────────────┤
│ 4. Breakfall       │ High fall received with  │ Only after forward roll   │
│ (tobi ukemi)       │ a slap and roll at speed │ is completely smooth.     │
│                    │                          │ Build height gradually    │
└────────────────────┴──────────────────────────┴───────────────────────────┘

Key principles:

  1. Slap absorbs impact → spreads force across arm → time it pre-body
  2. Tuck chin every fall → head never contacts ground
  3. Exhale on impact; held breath → rigid → injury risk
  4. Forward rolls round + smooth → thuds/flat = not curved
  5. Both sides: right + left shoulder forward

2-3 months regular → forward rolls smooth + quiet both sides. Backward auto (no fear). Thrown moderate speed, no hesitate.

If err: Forward rolls → shoulder pain → angle too steep (over top, not diagonal across back). Partner/instructor checks line. Fear → kneeling ver, build up. Never force breakfall pre-second-nature forward roll.

Step 3: Basic Techniques

4 foundational techniques → most common attacks + core principles.

Technique Selection by Attack:
┌─────────────────┬──────────────────┬──────────────────────────────────────┐
│ Attack          │ Technique        │ Principle                            │
├─────────────────┼──────────────────┼──────────────────────────────────────┤
│ Straight strike │ Irimi-nage       │ Enter behind the attack line, lead   │
│ (shomen-uchi)   │ (entering throw) │ attacker's head in a spiral, project │
├─────────────────┼──────────────────┼──────────────────────────────────────┤
│ Diagonal strike │ Shiho-nage       │ Redirect the attacking arm overhead  │
│ (yokomen-uchi)  │ (four-direction  │ in a spiral, control the wrist, cut  │
│                 │ throw)           │ down to throw in any direction       │
├─────────────────┼──────────────────┼──────────────────────────────────────┤
│ Wrist grab      │ Kote-gaeshi      │ Blend with the grab energy, apply    │
│ (katate-dori)   │ (wrist turn)     │ outward wrist rotation to unbalance  │
│                 │                  │ and project the attacker             │
├─────────────────┼──────────────────┼──────────────────────────────────────┤
│ Lapel/shoulder  │ Ikkyo            │ Control the elbow and wrist, pin     │
│ grab (ai-hanmi) │ (first teaching) │ the arm to the ground. Foundation    │
│                 │                  │ for all immobilizations              │
└─────────────────┴──────────────────┴──────────────────────────────────────┘

Per technique:

  1. Slow cooperative speed first
  2. Blend first: body off attack line (never block head-on)
  3. Connect: contact attacker's arm/body → feel balance
  4. Redirect: circular motion → guide energy into technique
  5. Complete: throw/pin w/ control — end encounter, not injure
  6. 10-20 reps/side, alternate roles (nage/tori throws, uke attacks + falls)
  7. Gradually increase speed + resistance as both gain proficiency

Smooth, circular. Attacker led not forced. Cooperative speed → both finish safely no strain.

If err: Needs muscle → blending incomplete → fighting not redirecting. Return to contact moment, practice blend isolated. Attacker yanked/wrenched → slow down, lead w/ center not hands.

Step 4: Blending (Tai Sabaki)

Body movement = engine. Technique no movement = wrestling.

  1. Irimi (entering): Step directly forward + past attacker, inside reach
    • Practice: partner punches; step past → behind shoulder
  2. Tenkan (turning): Pivot 180° on front foot → redirect line
    • Practice: partner grabs wrist; pivot smoothly → face same direction
  3. Irimi-tenkan (enter + turn): Combine — most common
    • Practice: enter past attack, pivot → control behind
  4. Kaiten (rotation): Full body rotation → circular force for throws
    • Practice: combined w/ shiho-nage + rotational techniques
  5. Solo first: step-pivot, step-pivot across mat
  6. Partner: match timing → move as they commit, not before/after

Fluid, centered, timed to attack. Defender never squared facing force → angled off line.

If err: Off timing (early/late) → slow telegraphed attack. Move same moment attack commits = "aiki" timing. Clumsy turns → tenkan standalone: 100 pivots/session → smooth auto rotation.

Step 5: Randori (Multiple Attackers)

Develops awareness + decisiveness when overwhelmed. Principles tested.

  1. 2 attackers slow → turns (not simultaneous)
  2. Core: never stop moving. Stationary = surrounded
  3. Each attacker = shield against others: redirect one → path of another
  4. Move to open space → never corner/wall
  5. Extend awareness all directions; no fixate on one (see mindfulness)
  6. Simple reliable techniques — complex fails under pressure
  7. Progress to 3, then 4, increase speed
  8. Not about defeating all → maintain center + freedom

Stay calm + mobile while approached multi-angle. Fluid technique, no freezing/tunnel.

If err: Panic → 2 slow attackers. Randori anxiety normal, decreases w/ exposure. Techniques collapse → simplify: irimi + tenkan only, no throws. Movement + positioning > execution in randori.

Step 6: Weapons Awareness

Deepens distance, timing, line — improves empty-hand.

  1. Jo (staff): 31-count jo kata → line + extension
    • Teaches distance + space control
    • Partner: jo-dori (staff taking) — disarm staff attack empty-hand
  2. Bokken (wooden sword): Suburi (cutting exercises) → precision + center line
    • Teaches commitment: every cut precise line
    • Partner: kumitachi (paired sword forms) → timing + distance
  3. Tanto (wooden knife): Tanto-dori (knife defense)
    • Teaches respect close-range danger
    • Always redirect weapon hand — never reach blade
  4. Principles transfer to empty-hand:
    • Ma-ai (distance): too close invites weapon; too far wastes response
    • Shomen (center line): all attacks/defenses relate to vertical center
    • Zanshin (continuing awareness): alert after technique completes

Weapons clarify why tai sabaki, timing, distance matter. Empty-hand improves as movement precises.

If err: Weapons awkward/disconnected → suburi (solo cutting) 1 month before partner. Partner competitive/dangerous → slow down → wooden can injure at speed.

Step 7: Off-Mat Principles

Value beyond dojo → daily interaction + conflict resolution.

  1. Confrontation → mental irimi-tenkan: move toward concern (enter), redirect → common ground (turn)
  2. Physical space → awareness position, exits, body language (see mindfulness)
  3. "Receive" criticism/aggression no resistance — acknowledge energy, redirect
  4. Habit center before stress: drop to one-point, relax shoulders, extend calm
  5. Regular schedule:
    • Solo (daily, 15-30 min): centering, ukemi, tai sabaki, suburi
    • Partner (2-3x/week, 60-90 min): techniques, randori, weapons partner
  6. Complement tai chi → internal energy (see tai-chi)
  7. Complement meditation → stillness + equanimity (see meditate)

Principles — blending, redirecting, centering — natural responses to daily conflict. Physical practice maintains + deepens martial skill.

If err: Lapses → smallest unit: 5 min centering + 20 rolls. Consistency > duration. Disconnected from daily → reflect: irimi = face problem direct; tenkan = change perspective; ukemi = recover setback.

Check

  • Centered stance absorbs moderate pushes no muscular resistance
  • Forward rolls smooth, quiet, both sides
  • 4+ basic techniques cooperative w/ partner
  • Tai sabaki (irimi, tenkan, irimi-tenkan) solo + partner
  • Randori 2 slow attackers 60 sec no freezing
  • 1+ weapon (jo, bokken, tanto) solo kata
  • Solo + partner components regularly

Traps

  • Muscle instead of blending: Needs strength → timing/angle wrong. Relax, re-enter, let attacker's energy work. Power from redirecting, not generating.
  • Neglect ukemi: Avoid falling → avoid learning. Ukemi IS aikido. Every session, start.
  • Fear of commitment: Half-hearted irimi → worst position — too close evade, too far control. Decide enter → commit fully.
  • Fixate on one attacker: Tunnel vision dangerous. Soft wide awareness. Peripheral detects motion before focused.
  • Compliant partners only: Beginners need cooperation; intermediate gradually more resistance. Technique only on cooperative = incomplete.

  • tai-chi — complementary internal; shares yielding principle, solo focus
  • mindfulness — defensive awareness → perceptual foundation for martial readiness
  • meditate — seated meditation → centered equanimous mind under pressure
  • heal — body mechanics from aikido → first aid + bodywork
  • redirect — AI variant; maps blending/redirection → conflicting demands + tool failures

GitHub 仓库

pjt222/agent-almanac
路径: i18n/caveman-ultra/skills/aikido
0
agentsagentskillsai-assisted-developmentclaude-codeskillsteams
FAQ

Frequently asked questions

What is the aikido skill?

aikido is a Claude Skill by pjt222. Skills package instructions and resources that Claude loads on demand, so Claude can perform aikido-related tasks without extra prompting.

How do I install aikido?

Use the install commands on this page: add aikido to Claude Code as a plugin, or clone its repository into your skills directory, then restart Claude so it picks up the skill.

What category does aikido belong to?

aikido is in the Meta category, tagged ai and design.

Is aikido free to use?

Yes. aikido is listed on AIMCP and free to install. It runs inside Claude, so no separate service account is required to use the skill itself.

相关推荐技能

content-collections

Content Collections 是一个 TypeScript 优先的构建工具,可将本地 Markdown/MDX 文件转换为类型安全的数据集合。它专为构建博客、文档站和内容密集型 Vite+React 应用而设计,提供基于 Zod 的自动模式验证。该工具涵盖从 Vite 插件配置、MDX 编译到生产环境部署的完整工作流。

查看技能
polymarket

这个Claude Skill为开发者提供完整的Polymarket预测市场开发支持,涵盖API调用、交易执行和市场数据分析。关键特性包括实时WebSocket数据流,可监控实时交易、订单和市场动态。开发者可用它构建预测市场应用、实施交易策略并集成实时市场预测功能。

查看技能
creating-opencode-plugins

该Skill帮助开发者创建OpenCode插件,用于接入命令、文件、LSP等25+种事件。它提供了插件结构、事件API规范和JavaScript/TypeScript实现模式,适合需要拦截操作、扩展功能或自定义事件处理的场景。开发者可通过它快速构建响应式模块来增强OpenCode AI助手的能力。

查看技能
sglang

SGLang是一个专为LLM设计的高性能推理框架,特别适用于需要结构化输出的场景。它通过RadixAttention前缀缓存技术,在处理JSON、正则表达式、工具调用等具有重复前缀的复杂工作流时,能实现极速生成。如果你正在构建智能体或多轮对话系统,并追求远超vLLM的推理性能,SGLang是理想选择。

查看技能